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June 2019

Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

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Page 1: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

June 2019

Page 2: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Presenter

National Institutes of Health:Mark Rohrbaugh–Special Advisor for

Technology Transfer, Office of Science PolicyWith contributions by Ann Hammersla –

Director, Division of Extramural Inventions and Technology Resources

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Page 3: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

NIH Mission

To seek fundamental knowledge about the nature and behavior of living systems and the application of that knowledge to:

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Enhance health

Reduce illness

Lengthen life

Page 4: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Section 1

Intellectual Property, Inventions, and Patents

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Page 5: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Technology Transfer5

Technology TransferInvention

Evaluation

Marketing & Licensing

Data

Research

Publications

Inventions & Patents

Policies

Page 6: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

What is Intellectual Property? Intellectual Property =

Creations of the mind.

Protected by U.S and International laws:Patent, trademark, unfair competition, copyright, trade secret, the

right of publicity, and plant variety protection.

Intellectual Property Systems/laws aim to foster an environment in which creativity and innovation is created, supported, developed, protected, all with benefits to the public.

Enables creator(s) to earn recognition, commercialize product that benefits the public and/or financial benefit from what they invent or create.

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Page 7: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Invention Is……..

Invention =Any invention or discovery that is or may be either

patentable, plant variety protectable, or otherwise protectable under laws at 35 U.S.C. (Patents) or 7 U.S.C. 2321 et seq. (Plant Varieties)

New scientific or technical ideaDevice, method, composition of material, or

process

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Page 8: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

What is a Patent? Patent = the grant of a property right to the inventor: Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

was filed in the U.S. and in some cases filed internationally. The term can be extended for certain circumstances: delay in the patent

office of granting the patent; certain FDA considerations

U.S. patents are effective only within the United States, U.S. territories, and U.S. possessions.

Once patented the patentee must enforce the patent, at their decision, without the USPTO’s assistance.

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Page 9: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Patents continuedTypes of U.S. Patent Applications:

Provisional – term is 1 year from the date of filing and is converted to a full – U.S. patent application (non-provisional) or an international patent application is filed.

Non-provisional: 3 Types:

Utility patents – any new and useful process, machine, article of manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new or useful improvement thereof.

Design Patents – new, original, and ornamental design for an article of manufacture

Plant patents – any distinct and new variety of plant

Continuations, Continuations In-Part, Divisionals

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Page 10: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Patent Rights (continued)

Patent Protection =The right to exclude others from making, using, offering for sale or selling the inventionthroughout the United States, or importing the invention into the United States and its territories and possessions.

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Page 11: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Patents – What Do They Protect?

Patents – protect inventions = a discovery or finding To be granted a patent and invention must be:

Novel – new – not known before; not a product of nature.Useful – has utility, specific, and credible.Non-obvious – was not obvious to a person having

ordinary skill in the area of the invention.

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Page 12: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

What Cannot be Patented?

Laws of nature – anything naturally occurring: genes, plants Can protect genetically modified products Devices and products for practicing or using medical methods can be

patentable but the methods themselves are not patentable e.g. surgery methods, etc.

Physical phenomena Abstract ideas Literary, dramatic, musical, and artistic works (these can be copyright

protected) Inventions which are not useful or cannot work (such as perpetual

motion machines)

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Page 13: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Supreme Court decisions on what can be patented Natural, unaltered DNA sequences cannot be patented, whether from virus, bacteria, plant,

animal or human

Genes and DNA sequences spliced together can be patented, for example to produce a vaccine or protein from cell cultures

Natural proteins and chemicals from nature without modification cannot be patient, e.g. newly discovered peyote chemical that reduces anxiety

A medication made of the newly discovered peyote chemical and stabilizers in a pill can be patented for use in treating a condition

Natural associations cannot be patented, e.g. measuring level of protein X in blood to diagnose disease Y.

Association must be tied to concrete steps that are not previously known or routine, e.g. measuring amount of medication in patients blood, and if not above level A, increase the dose until it reaches level A to have its full effect.

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Page 14: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Patents: Protecting Rights prior to Public Disclosure

File enabled patent application prior to disclosing, e.g., disclosing through posters, presentations, publications, talks, etc.

Do not have substantive discussions/exchanges with third-parties unless they are under confidentiality obligations.Use confidential disclosure agreements (CDAs) whenever

possible for discussions or other exchanges with potential investors, collaborators, licensees, et al.

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Page 15: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Inventions and Patents In the Award Process

- Inventions/Patents subject to the termsof the NIH funding is Always Post Award

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Page 16: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Research and Invention Process

Awards research funds

Funds researcher

Discovers an Invention 3-20 years

Report to NIH Using iEdison

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Page 17: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Section 2

Bayh-Dole Act17

Page 18: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

What is Bayh-Dole?

Bayh-Dole Statute (35 U.S.C 200)A term and condition of all federal research

funding agreements since 1980First substantive update to Bayh-Dole effective

for NIH 10/1/2018Modified some reporting requirements and

granted greater rights to federal funding recipients

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Page 19: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Bayh-Dole Act:Federal Funding Agreements

Policies & Objectives (35 U.S.C. 200):Use the patent system to promote the utilization of inventions

arising from federally supported research or development.Encourage participation of small businesses and provide to

them a preference in licensing by nonprofit organizations.Promote collaboration between commercial concerns and

nonprofit organizations.Ensure inventions are used in a manner to promote free

competition and enterprise without unduly encumbering future research and discovery.

Promote the commercialization and public availability of inventions made with federal support.

Ensure that the Government obtains sufficient rights in federally supported inventions.

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Page 20: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

More on the Bayh-Dole Act

Applies to most U.S, federal funding agreements. Except: Awards primarily for educational purposes: fellowships,

scholarships, and most training awards

Sets forth recipient/contactor rights and responsibilities & government’s rights and obligations for inventions and discoveries made in whole or in part with federal funding.

Bayh-Dole refers to “contractor” as: any person, small business firm, large for-profit corporation, or any organization which is a party to a funding agreement.

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Page 21: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Bayh-Dole Act:Recipient Rights and Responsibilities

Recipient has rights and responsibilities in order to retain its right to elect and keep title: Filing invention disclosures, patents, annual utilization reports, etc. are done

through iEdison.

One institutional representative must be approved by their institution and NIH for access to their institutional records Representative’s name needs to be kept up-to-date in iEdison.

No access is provided to any other institution’s records UNLESS given permission by the other institution.

iEdison records are confidential and are protected under FOIA.

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Page 22: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Bayh-Dole Act: ResourcesNIH web resources: Bayh-Dole Regulations:

http://grants.nih.gov/grants/bayh-dole.htm

Intellectual Property Policy:http://grants.nih.gov/grants/intell-property.htm

Invention Reporting Timeline: https://era.nih.gov/iedison/invention_timeline.cfm

iEdison & Intellectual Property FAQs and Resources: https://era.nih.gov/iedison/iedison_faqs.cfm

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Page 23: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

COPYRIGHT ©

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Page 24: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Copyright:

Protects “original works of authorship” (books, written articles, software, music, plays, films, photos, art) X NOT raw facts or dataX NOT functional aspects of artistic objectsX NOT slogans, titles, or monikers

At the instant the author’s work is “fixed in any tangible medium of expression” Registration or marking (but each is a good idea) Library of Congress https://www.copyright.gov/

Page 25: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Copyright: Ownership

In general, the author owns the copyrightUniversity policies or grant terms may require

assignment of ownership to the institution.Companies usually require assignment of copyright if

made during the course and scope of employmentWorks by two or more people with the common intent of

making a single final product are jointly owned As is the case of real property, but unlike patents, co-

owners have a duty to account to each other for royalties collected

US Government cannot assert © in its works

Page 26: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Section 4

Data and Other NIH Sharing Policies26

Page 27: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Guiding Principle of the NIH Genomic Data Sharing Policy

The greatest public benefit will be realized if large-scale genomic data are made available in a timely manner to the largest

possible number of investigators. For human data, data are made

available under terms and conditions consistent with the informed consent provided by

individual participants.

Page 28: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

NIH Genomic Data Sharing Policy Purpose

o Sets expectations and responsibilities for investigators and institutions to ensure broad, responsible, and timely sharing of genomic research data

Scopeo Applies to all NIH-funded research generating large-

scale human or non-human genomic data and secondary research using these data

o Applies to all funding mechanisms (grants, contracts, intramural support) regardless of cost

Effective January 25, 2015

Page 29: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Sharing, Use and Distribution of Research Results

NIH Sharing Policy webpage at http://sharing.nih.gov

NIH policies and examples of sharing plans (e.g., Data, Model Organisms) help program and funding applicants review/match acceptable plans.

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Page 30: Inventions, Patents, and NIH Intellectual Property Policies...Issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office Term of a U.S. patent – 20 years from the date the first application

Thank You

For any questions on extramural invention reporting, data and resource sharing, or other related extramural intellectual property policy issues:

Contact:

NIH/OER/DEITR Telephone & iEdison HelpDesk: (301) 435-1986NIH/OSP Mark Rohrbaugh (301) 435-4485

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